The program, which targeted motorists who owe more than $1,000 in tolls from driving on the Garden State Parkway and New Jersey Turnpike, has been in effect since April of last year.

Vehicle registrations for 300 violators have been suspended since then and drivers have paid or agreed to pay $650,000 in tolls and fines, the newspaper reported.

The New Jersey Turnpike Authority’s board voted today to make the program permanent, lowering the $1,000 threshold to “any significant sum," the Press reported.

The authority paid the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission $14,400 in administrative costs to revoke registrations under the pilot program. The permanent agreement budgets $50,000 a year for administrative costs, according to the Press.

The program is part of larger effort to enforce tolls that includes installing cameras in all toll lanes to capture violator license plates.